This project is open source and contributions are very welcomed. It is also as beginner friendly as possible, so don't be afraid to jump in if you've never contributed to any Git project before! Feel free to reach out if you are new and need help with the process.
- switch to the develop branch `git checkout develop`. This is the branch where features are added. Checking it out will set up the remote tracking to the develop branch on Github.
- create a new branch for your feature off of the develop branch `git checkout -b feature-thing develop`. Please be sure to prepend your new feature branch with "feature-"
- Once approved, your changes will be merged to the develop branch where it will eventually be added to a release that ends up in the master branch. Check out [Vincent Driessen's blog post](http://nvie.com/posts/a-successful-git-branching-model/), [GitFlow](https://datasift.github.io/gitflow/IntroducingGitFlow.html), or [#27](https://github.com/rhyneav/papercss/issues/27) for more details on how this works.
Note: If you have a hotfix, create your hotfix branch off of the master branch instead of develop: `git checkout -b hotfix-1.X.X master`
I got tired of mODerN STylEs and clean pages on the internet. I also wanted to learn more about Flexbox and Less. So I made PaperCSS to solve these two challenges of mine :)
The goal of PaperCSS is to be as minimal as possible when adding classes. For example, a button should just look like a paper button. There shouldn't be a need to add a class such as `paper-button`. Because of this, adding PaperCSS to a markdown generated page should instantly paper-ize it.
While I'm proud of how it's turned out so far, I think there's a lot that can still be done to make it better. Such things as refactoring, adding more utility classes and more border types (like dashed/dotted) could really polish off this framework. That's why it's open sourced and available for pull requests!
If you are new to Git or Less, this would be a great project to get your feet wet with. I'd be happy to help walk you through the pull request process.